-
Dizzy, this is not easy to write, wouldn't it be nice to grasp a few key points?
1. The price of grain has been greatly reduced, and the cost has increased. Farming does not transfer money, forcing peasants to go out to work.
2 Affected by the financial crisis, wages in all construction development and other industries have been greatly reduced, resulting in migrant workers... It's simple
-
1) Production determines consumption, and production determines the manner, quality and level of consumption. Only by maintaining steady and relatively rapid economic development can we ensure the employment of peasant workers, increase peasant incomes, and improve peasant living standards. Consumption has an important counter-effect on production, and consumption drives economic growth and promotes production development.
Consumption is the ultimate goal and driving force of the overall process of material production. Ensuring the stability of peasant workers' incomes is conducive to stabilizing and raising the peasants' consumption level, stimulating domestic demand, and arousing the peasants' enthusiasm for production, thereby creating a new impetus for production.
2) It is necessary to implement an active employment policy, strengthen guidance, create more employment opportunities, strengthen employment training for migrant workers, and provide information services. Migrant workers should establish a correct concept of employment, that is, the concept of independent choice of employment, the concept of competitive employment, the concept of occupational equality, and the concept of employment in various ways. It is necessary to continuously improve one's vocational skills and quality, enhance the competitiveness of reemployment, and find employment through multiple channels.
Improve the employment mechanism, give full play to the role of the market mechanism in the allocation of labor resources, and use the market to guide migrant workers to actively find employment.
-
For the thousands of "migrant workers" who make a living in the eastern coastal areas, they are not "workers" in the official traditional definition, and they have neither the constraints nor the guarantees of the system. There is no place to stay here, there is a place to stay here, and there is the heroism of the proletarians. But if an economy-wide depression hits, will there still be enough factories to provide them with jobs?
In this early winter, a financial turmoil in a distant and foreign country has engulfed the fate of tens of millions of Chinese migrant workers, making their journey home early this year not so warm and ......
Some export-oriented enterprises in coastal cities have been affected by the financial crisis and have cut wages, laid off employees or closed down, which has had an impact on the employment of migrant workers. According to ** report, the secretary of the municipal party committee of a major labor-exporting city in the west once said: "We have more than 2 million people working outside, and we are most afraid that these people will return and become a social problem."
I understand that the "social problem" mentioned by the secretary of the municipal party committee is the question of "what to do if the number of migrant workers returning to their hometowns surges under the financial crisis". Migrant workers are mobile, and there will be a phenomenon of returning to their hometowns every year, such as busy farming, Chinese New Year, etc. According to our survey of 120 villages in 11 provinces in October, the number of people returning to their hometowns this year is significantly higher than in previous years, accounting for about half of the migrant workers.
The main reason for this phenomenon is that the financial crisis and changes in the macroeconomic situation have led to layoffs or even closure of some enterprises in some coastal areas. When there is no work to do or the income is seriously reduced, it is also a rational choice for migrant workers to return to their hometowns.
Changes in the age structure of migrant workers are also an important factor. China's "migrant workers in the city" has risen for more than ten years. Many of the migrant workers who came out early will no longer come out after returning to their hometowns as they grow older, and the number of these migrant workers will increase year by year.
On the other hand, a series of policies recently introduced by the state to strengthen agriculture and benefit farmers, such as giving farmers more adequate and secure land contract management rights, have also attracted migrant workers to return to their hometowns to a certain extent.
We have found that there are still about 70 or 80 million surplus laborers in the rural areas, and although the total amount is significantly lower than that of previous years, the scale is still huge. Under such circumstances, if there is an unconventional large-scale return of migrant workers, it will further exacerbate the existing problem of rural labor surplus.
Students, I am teaching you logistics teachers! About the development of the logistics industry in North China under the financial crisis** In order to prevent you from plagiarizing! I have searched all the first 40 pages of all the pages about the development of the logistics industry in North China under the financial crisis! >>>More
China is bound to become one of the world's top two.
Hello, is it okay for the development of small and medium-sized enterprises, processing industry, and **?
As for the bias of trust, it is actually a question of confusion, especially in the context of China's cultural background with many traditions and chronic diseases. >>>More
If you really want to write well, it's too late to learn anything else, so let's specialize in a genre. >>>More